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COLORADO SPRINGS — Two men were said to be wearing George W. Bush Halloween masks — or maybe masks of his father — when they robbed a bank at gunpoint in north Colorado Springs on Wednesday morning, the Gazette reports.

The robbery occurred about 11:20 a.m., when the pair, armed with handguns, grabbed cash from at least one teller at American National Bank, 1095 W. Garden of the Gods Road, police told the newspaper.

Denver police are looking for a man they said robbed a bank through the drive-through window.

Police responded at 11:34 a.m. Saturday to a US Bank branch at 4930 Colorado Blvd. after a man demanded money through the drive-through window. A representative for the Denver Police Department didn’t know whether the suspect was armed or how he was able to get the money.

Statistics were not immediately available, but police said robberies through drive-through windows are uncommon.

The FBI is looking for the “Blessings Bandit”, who is suspected in five bank robberies in the Denver area, including a Lakewood bank Saturday and a Centennial bank Monday morning.

The TCF Bank branch at 7595 West Colfax Ave. in Lakewood was robbed at about 9 a.m. Saturday, and the Chase Bank branch at 7490 South University Blvd. in Centennial was robbed just before 11 a.m. today.

In each of the robberies, his note demanding cash and threatening violence ended with “God bless,” authorities said.

At 8:10 on Thursday morning a suspect entered the Colorado Business Bank at 821 17th St., according to a news release from the FBI in Denver. The suspect presented a note demanding money. He then fled with an undisclosed amount of cash.

At 5:50 p.m. on Friday a suspect entered Academy Bank on 9901 Grant St. in Thornton and demanded money, according to a news release from the FBI in Denver. The man, who acted like he had a weapon, fled with an undisclosed amount of cash.

Two men are accused of committing eight bank robberies in Colorado Springs and Fountain in which they took turns accosting tellers at gunpoint, Colorado Springs police said Friday.

Police described Daryl Keener and Gary Cyprian as “career criminals” who netted more than $64,000 in a scheme meant to make police believe that only one man was responsible for the heists.

“If there were such a thing as a pro bank robber in the area, they were it,” detective Sgt. Dale Fox said at a news conference.

Keener, 30, and Cyprian, 28, met in prison, worked for the same employer and spent “nearly every waking hour together,” during which they worked out a uniform approach to robbing banks, Fox said.

One man entered the bank with a handgun while the other waited in a getaway car.

“They would walk in and tell the customers to get on the floor, and they were very comfortable doing it,” Fox said.

The men — who wore hooded sweatshirts and masks — used similar language to ask for large bills and warn clerks against placing security features such as dye packs or GPS beacons in the cash.

Police say Keener brought the expertise about bank security and police investigative tactics: He was sentenced in a bank robbery in 2003 and served six years.

The robberies started Dec. 28 and ended March 8, just a few days after police got lucky by finding a business with surveillance footage of a sport-utility vehicle fleeing a March 3 robbery at Key Bank, 1115 Elkton Drive, Fox said.

An employee of the business later recognized the same vehicle driving down the street more than two miles away.

This time, however, the worker had a view of the rear license plate that couldn’t be seen on the surveillance footage. The plate was traced to a Dodge Durango belonging to Cyprian and his wife, police said.

Police turned up four weapons while searching a garage used by Keener, including three pistols and a semiautomatic variant of a Fabrique Nationale carbine rifle generally associated with military special forces groups.

On Feb. 18 at 9:41 a.m. a suspect entered the Wells Fargo Bank at 3333 S. Bannock St. and presented a note demanding money. He fled with an undisclosed amount of cash, according to a news release from the FBI Denver Division.

On March 1, a suspect entered the Key Bank at 2776 N. Speer Blvd. at 11 a.m. This man also presented a note demanding money, and fled with an undisclosed amount of cash.

On March 8 at 12:39 p.m. a suspect entered the Compass Bank at 4600 South Broadway in Englewood, according to a news release from the FBI Denver Division. The suspect presented a note demanding money and fled with an unknown amount of cash.